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Ebenezer Obey: Unstoppable Flight Of Destiny (2)

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Tunde Odesola

Out, out, brief candle! And the bard died. Darkness descended. The soul departed the body in a final shuttle, shuffling off this mortal coil, to be heard no more but his legacy lives on, Sikiru Ayinde Barrister (MFR).

Unlike Fuji music, whose originator, Barrister, battled lifelong to assert his kingship, Jùjú music is a better-refined genre in terms of lyrical chastity, practitioners’ temperance and fan conduct. Barrister’s alter ego and abiding rival, General Kollington Ayinla aka Kébé Ńkwárà, said in an interview that enmity watered Fuji music to fruition.

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Soon, the wheel of destiny caught up with a karmic past, turning full cycle in Alagbado, a Lagos suburb. While urging reigning Fuji stars to embrace peace and unity, Kollington, who fiercely challenged Barrister’s claim to Fuji kingship, admitted after Barrister died, that Agbájélolá was truly the founder of Fuji. If Kollington had died before Barrister and didn’t confess that Barrister founded Fuji, Baba Alátíká would have put a question mark on the crown of Bàrúsátì in the House of Agódo, from where Fuji originated. That wasn’t honourable, Kébé. That was a rivalry bitterly intentioned to rob Olóládé of his primacy.

However, what the Fuji genre lost to roughness, rawness and raunchiness, it gained in its simple vocal modulation, singable and danceable lyrics, making more practitioners embrace it much more than Jùjú, which pays detail to instrumentation and vocality.

In an interview with Àgbàletù TV a few months before he died, Obey’s master, Fatai Rolling Dollar, was asked about the meaning and evolution of Jùjú music. Born in Ede and christened Olayiwola Fatai Olagunju, in 1927, Rolling Dollar, who headlined music shows till he died in 2013, a few days before his 86th birthday, said: “Jùjú music doesn’t connote voodoo. The name Jùjú came from the way people threw the tambourine to one another while making music in those days. It was a fad to throw the tambourine to one another while playing music in those days, saying jú sí mi. Throw, in Yoruba language, means jú, and when you say jú repeatedly, it sounds like ‘jù-jú’.”

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FROM THE AUTHOR: Ebenezer Obey: Unstoppable Flight Of Destiny (1) [OPINION ]

Rolling Dollar said Akanbi Ege was the first to play Jùjú music and also explained that Tunde King was the first to wax a Jùjú record. His words, “We had the Akanbi Ege (band), Atari Ajanaku (band) which included Ambrose Campbell before he went abroad. Atari Ajanaku (band) played the flute to their Jùjú. We also had Ayinde Bakare, Victor Olaiya, Ojoge Daniel and Rose Adetola separately played in the western region (Ibadan), Tunde Nightingale, S. F. Olowookere, IK Dairo started in Ibadan before moving to Lagos, Dele Ojo played in Ibadan before Sunday (King Sunny Ade) and Ebenezer (Obey) came on board.”

Rolling Dollar recalled how he got his nickname. “In 1935, whenever we wanted to play football in my primary school, St Patrick School located at Enu Owa-Ori Koriko on Lagos Island, I would be called upon to bring my dollar coin out and roll it, head or tail, so that we could choose 11 players each. That was where the name Rolling Dollar came from.”

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Copyright issues didn’t result in bitter fights in those days as musicians showed more restraint and understanding than what obtains nowadays. The song, “Easy Motion Tourist”, which was composed by Rolling Dollar when he was in Julius Araba’s band, but remade by KSA, only attracted an apology to Rolling Dollar just as the song, ‘Ęní rí ǹkan he’, originally made by Ambrose Campbell but reworked by Obey didn’t end in acrimony.

By 1945, Rolling Dollar joined a band in Lagos. That was long before Obey apprenticed himself to Dollar in the early 50s before forming his own band, Royal Mambo Orchestra, at 15, in 1957. During their very first meeting, Obey’s prodigy shone through as he composed five songs when they walked to Dollar’s one-bedroom apartment, with the older musician strumming the guitar. The Ede prince affirmed Obey’s forebearance, hard work, managerial skills and creativity.

He recalled he got the inspiration for the hit, “Easy Motion Tourist,” when he and his truanting musical colleagues returned to the house of a friend, Olaseeni Tejuosho aka Téjè, from a gig late into the night. “The father of Téjè was a successful and rich lawyer who didn’t want his son to play music. We returned to their house after midnight, his father opened the window of his bedroom upstairs and asked where we were coming from. Téjè said we were coming from a gig. His father said we should return to where we were coming from. It was his mother that came to open the door for us later. That was where I got the inspiration from, we were coming from faaji (easy motion), and the son of the landlord was locked outside.”

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For 20 years, Obey’s mother, Abigail Oyindamola, was in the pit of sorrow because she was barren. Her family, fearing she could hurt herself with depression, felt a change of environment would do her some good. So, they advised her to go and stay with some family members in Ìdògò. In Ìdògò, a carpenter saw the beautiful lady, and told his friends, who were her elder brothers, “I will marry this your younger sister and she will give birth to male and female children for me.” The carpenter had three wives and many children already.

The prediction came through as the carpenter, Nathaniel Olaseewo Fabiyi, married Oyindamola, and their union was blessed with a baby girl they named Ooreofe Grace Olasunbo Amoke Fabiyi. Oyindamola, a cloth seller, was overjoyed.

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Three years after the birth of their firstborn, the couple was blessed with a baby boy, Ebenezer Olasupo Remilekun Aremu Fabiyi. The carpenter-father wanted Ebenezer to become a carpenter like him, teaching him carpentry but Ebenezer had sold his soul to music from heaven.

To actualise his destiny, Obey left Ìdògò for Lagos, working as a newspaper vendor, bricklayer and well digger. But he remained focused on his goal – to become a ‘future star’. In fact, this was what he told the female secretary, who attempted to prevent him from seeing the Managing Director of Decca Studios, Yaba. Obey begged the secretary at the top of his voice, “I’m a future star! Don’t give me money, my music will sell.” It was the noise the Managing Director of Decca (West Africa) Limited, a white man, heard that prompted him to ask on the intercom what was happening. “Sir, there’s a young man who says he’s a future star. I told him the artist manager is on leave but he won’t listen,” the secretary said. “Send him to my office,” the MD replied. Obey later rose to become the Chairman of Decca after the death of Chief MKO Abiola.

If Obey didn’t understand his mother tongue proficiently, he could never reach his destiny. This is a lesson to parents who denigrate Nigerian languages, placing a premium on foreign languages. On the leadership rung of the country’s ladder, hardly can you find a successful Nigerian who cannot speak their mother tongue.

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For families who have been forced to relocate abroad because of misgovernment, it’s still important to teach your children their mother tongue, for no matter how long they stay abroad, there’s no place like home.

To our mediocre and corrupt governments, who deserve heaps of curses daily, the sense of displacement and identity loss suffered by Nigerians who relocate abroad cannot be overemphasised. ‘Tis disgraceful that public officers ceaselessly engage in trifling when starvation stalked Nigerians.

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Obey, whose oeuvre consists of countless gospel songs, in the 1990s, finally quit recording secular music and became an evangelist. He formed DeCross Gospel Mission, a massive church located along Oyewole Road, Orile Agege, near Omotoye Estate, where his elder sister, Mama Olasunbo Keyede, lived with her husband, Baba Keyede, and their beautiful children – Seyi, Funke, Olumide, Tosin and Tolu. Olumide is my childhood friend. We bonded in the early 80s on Omotoye Estate where I also lived with my parents. Baba Keyede would stop you, no matter how young you are, and have a chatty discussion with you about your education. May his soul and that of his wife rest in peace.

Destiny and Fate are curious co-travellers. As a youngster, my family once lived at No 2 Lawanson Crescent, off Kayode Street, Mushin. One afternoon, I was sitting with my little sister on a table, near the balcony balustrade. Something caught my attention and I looked away. When my gaze returned to the table, I didn’t see my kid sister. I looked under the table, but she was not there. I looked down at the ground floor, there she was on the concrete floor! People rushed towards her, I fled downstairs.

Florence lived. She had no scratch on her body. Florence Ariyike Adewusi nee Odesola lived for 47 years before death came calling through cancer. She long gave her life to God and lived in his worship. She was a diligent worker at DeCross Church. Little wonder Baba Obey backrolled her funeral, saying ‘Florence was my daughter’.

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Concluded.

Email: tundeodes2003@yahoo.com

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Navy Opens Recruitment For Basic Training School Batch 38

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The Nigerian Navy has opened applications for its Basic Training School (BTS) Batch 38 recruitment exercise, scheduled to run from October 2 to October 31, 2025.

According to an official statement, the recruitment process is free, and interested applicants must submit their applications online at https://www.joinnigeriannavy.navy.mil.ng/https://www.joinnigeriannavy.navy.mil.ng.

Successful candidates will undergo basic military training before being officially enlisted as Ordinary Seamen.

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The Navy stressed that eligibility is restricted to Nigerian citizens by birth with a valid National Identification Number (NIN). Applicants must have no criminal record and must not be affiliated with secret societies, cults, or fraternities.

READ ALSO:NUC Begins Nationwide Recruitment, Opens Application Portal

Educational and age requirements were clearly outlined. Candidates applying with O’level results must be between 18 and 22 years old as of December 31, 2025.

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Those with OND/NCE qualifications must be aged 18 to 26, while Chaplain/Imam Assistants and Drivers/Mechanics must fall within the 18 to 28 age bracket.

In all cases, applicants are required to have at least five credits, including English Language and Mathematics, obtained in not more than two sittings in WAEC, NECO, GCE, or NABTEB, with certificates not older than 2015.

The Navy added that special professions, such as Medical Assistants and Nurses, require proof of registration with relevant professional bodies.

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READ ALSO:Air Peace Announces Recruitment For 1,000 Fresh Graduates [SEE How To APPLY]

Applicants for technical trades including tailoring, plumbing, carpentry, welding, and electrical works must present valid Trade Test certificates in addition to academic qualifications.

Similarly, candidates applying as sportsmen and women are expected to provide certificates and medals as evidence of their sporting achievements.

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The recruitment examination is scheduled for November 29, 2025, at designated centers nationwide.

READ ALSO:UK Bars Over 100 Job Roles From Foreign Recruitment To Curb Migration

Candidates are required to bring their Attestation Form, duly signed with a passport photograph of the signer, along with valid identification such as a Driver’s License, International Passport, or National ID Card.

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Applicants have been cautioned against multiple applications, which will lead to disqualification.

The Navy further advised candidates to seek clarification only through official communication channels provided on the recruitment portal.

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BREAKING: Gov Fubara Dissolves Rivers Pension Board

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Governor Siminalayi Fubara of Rivers State has dissolved the State Pensions Board with immediate effect.

Rivers State Head of Service Mrs Inyingi Brown made this announcement on Friday in Port Harcourt.

READ ALSO:Why I Visited Tinubu —Gov Fubara

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According to the governor, the office of the State Accountant General will handle the functions of the board until a new one is constituted.

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FAAN Launches Cashless Payment System Across Airports

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The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has launched the cashless system of payment across all airports.

FAAN in partnership with Paystack, is proud to announce the roll out of OPERATION GO CASHLESS, a cashless contactless payment solution across all airports beginning with Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, and Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja,” the agency said in a communique on Thursday.

Effective September 29, 2025, all payments at FAAN’s revenue points, including airport Access Gates, Car Parks, FAAN VIP and Protocol Lounges will go cashless which means the agency will be phasing out the collection of cash at these points.

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FAAN added that travelers and airport users will now enjoy fast and seamless services by using a secure contactless payment option.

READ ALSO:Account For Airport Toll Gate Revenue Since 2015, Court Orders FAAN

This initiative, it stated, is a response to the growing demand for safe, modern, and transparent payment systems while ensuring Nigeria’s airports remain aligned with global digital trends.

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By reducing reliance on cash, FAAN said it aims to enhance efficiency, improve revenue assurance, and deliver a better customer experience at our airports.

To ease the transition, trained brand ambassadors have been deployed at access gates and around the terminals to guide users, assist with onboarding, provide demonstrations, and answer questions they may have.

READ ALSO:FAAN Clears Air On Plane Seen On Lagos Road

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In addition, passengers have been directed to obtain a FAAN Go Cashless Card at any airport access gate in Lagos and Abuja.

After collection, users are encouraged to activate and fund their cards immediately by visiting www.gocashless. faan.gov.ng.

FAAN added that it remains committed to continuous improvement and will expand this cashless policy to other airports nationwide in phases.

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For inquiries, airport users have also been advised to contact FAAN’s support line at 0700 CBS FAAN (0700 227 3226) or email the agency at gocashlesssupport@faan.gov.ng.

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